Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Introduction to MATLAB for Engineers Third Edition William J. Palm III Chapter 11 MuPAD PowerPoint to accompany Copyright © 2010. The McGraw-Hill Companies,

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Introduction to MATLAB for Engineers Third Edition William J. Palm III Chapter 11 MuPAD PowerPoint to accompany Copyright © 2010. The McGraw-Hill Companies,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to MATLAB for Engineers Third Edition William J. Palm III Chapter 11 MuPAD PowerPoint to accompany Copyright © 2010. The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

2 What can you do with MuPAD? ■ Create symbolic expressions and manipulate them algebraically. ■ Obtain symbolic and numeric solutions to algebraic and transcendental equations. ■ Perform symbolic linear algebra operations, including obtaining expressions for determinants, matrix inverses, eigenvectors, and eigenvalues. ■ Perform symbolic differentiation and integration. ■ Evaluate limits and series symbolically. ■ Obtain symbolic solutions to ordinary differential equations. ■ Obtain and apply Laplace transforms. ■ Solve ordinary differential equations in terms of special functions or series. 11-2

3 To start MuPAD, first start MATLAB, then type mupadwelcome. You will then see the Welcome Screen shown on the next slide. If you just type mupad instead, you will immediately be presented with a blank notebook. 11-3

4 11-4 The MuPAD welcome screen. Figure 11.1-1 on page 467

5 If you then click on Getting Started, you will see what is on the next slide. Or you can click on Notebook Interface to bring up the Notebook Interface Help screen shown on slide 11-7. Or you can retrieve a previously created notebook by clicking on its name under Open Recent File. 11-5

6 The Getting Started screen. Figure 11.1-2 on page 467. 11-6

7 The Notebook Interface Help screen. Figure 11.1-3 on page 468. 11-7

8 The Notebook Interface shown on the next slide shows text, input, and output regions, with the code required to simplify an expression, to define a function, and to create a plot. 11-8

9 11-9 An example of the Notebook Interface.

10 The Standard toolbar. Figure 11.1-5 on page 469. 11-10

11 The Command bar. Figure 11.2-2 on page 474. 11-11

12 Entering Commands (page 470). [ cos(PI) [ -1 11-12

13 The General Math Menu. Page 475. 11-13 The General Math Menu Expand Simplify Factor Combine Normalize Rewrite Evaluate Solve

14 Table 11.2–1 Items on the Command bar. Page 475. 11-14 Derivatives Limits Sums Integrals Rewrite Expressions Products Solve Equations Simplify Evaluate with x = a Numerical Evaluation and Rounding Equality Tests Assignment Math Operators Factorials Function Definition Trig Functions Exponentials and Logs Piecewise Definitions Reserved SymbolsGreek Letters Physical Units Matrices and Vectors 2D Plot 3D Plot

15 The Simplify Menu. Page 476. 11-15 General Exponential Logical Logarithm Radical Sine Relational Cosine

16 The Combine Menu. Page 477. 11-16 General Power Arc Tangent Sine/Cosine Exponential Sine/Cosine Hyp Logarithm Square Root

17 Differential Heaviside Exponential Logarithm Factorial Sign Gamma Sine/Cosine The Rewrite Menu. Page 478. 11-17

18 Exact Polynomial Diophantine Equation Numeric Recurrences Linear System ODE The Solve Menu. Page 481. 11-18

19 Name and Symbol Function Call Airy, Ai(x) airy Ai(x) Airy, Bi(x) airy Bi(x) Chebyshev of first kind, T(n, x) chebyshev1 (n, x) Gamma, (x) gamma(x) Hermite, Hn(x) hermite (n,x) Bessel I, In(x) besselI(n,x) Bessel J, Jn(x) besselJ(n,x) Bessel K, Kn(x) besselK(n,x) Bessel Y, Yn(x) besselY (n,x) Laguerre, L(n, a, x) laguerreL(n,a,x) Legendre, Pn(x) legendre(n,x) Table 11.8–1 Special function calls in MuPAD. Page 512. 11-19

20 Result Code Symbolic finite series orthpoly:: Symbolic infinite series series Numeric result float Table 11.8–2 Evaluation of special functions in MuPAD 11-20

21 The following slides are figures from the examples and the homework problems. 11-21

22 Figure 11.3-1 for Example 11.3-1 on page 484. Intersection points of two circles. 11-22

23 Figure 11.3-2 for Example 11.3-2 on page 486. A robot arm having two joints and two links. 11-23

24 11-24 Figure 11.5-1 for Example 11.5-1 on pages 495-497. A baseball trajectory to clear the Green Monster.

25 11-25 Figure 11.7-1 on page 510. Two mechanical systems, one with and one without an input derivative.

26 11-26 Figure 11.7-2 on page 511.

27 Figure P12 for Problem 12 on pages 516-517. 11-27

28 11-28 Figure P13 for Problem 13 on pages 517-518.

29 11-29 Figure P13 for Problem 13 on page 519.

30 11-30 Figure P28 for Problem 28 on page 520.

31 11-31 Figure P29 for Problem 29 on pages 520-521.


Download ppt "Introduction to MATLAB for Engineers Third Edition William J. Palm III Chapter 11 MuPAD PowerPoint to accompany Copyright © 2010. The McGraw-Hill Companies,"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google